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Feedback: Plastic plug protects against e-smog, memories

Feedback is our weekly column of bizarre stories, implausible advertising claims, confusing instructions and more

sleeping man

Turn on, tune in, drop out

DURING his stay in idyllic Mornington Peninsula, the wine country south of Melbourne, Guy Cox noticed a strange device installed in his cabin. “Plugged in, but not switched on, was a GEOCLENSE Geopathic Stress and Electromagnetic Radiation Harmonizer – Wifi Harmonizer”. The device is proudly designed and made by Orgone Effects Australia.

It has been some time since Feedback paid thought to orgone, the intangible, invisible, vitalist substance that Wilhelm Reich believed to permeate and bring form to the universe. But perhaps Orgone Effects Australia are simply hinting at the ethereal nature of their device – after all, Apple aren’t in the fruit business. “It is a device of amazing crudity,” says Guy, “a block of epoxy with the base of a plug embedded in it.” He suspects “there is nothing connected to the pins, but since the device isn’t mine I can’t cut it up”.

At substantial risk to our own health, Feedback navigated through the electrosmog to reach , a website so opposed to all things e- that it has removed one of them from its URL. Here we learn that not only can modern electronics such as Wi-Fi, television and power lines endanger your health, but intriguingly so can fungus, artificial heating and “imprints from previous occupants’ emotional distress, illnesses and deaths”. What happened in that hotel room, we wonder?

“Derek Woodroffe notes that halfway down the BBC’s World News page is a section labelled “News From Elsewhere”. Time to hire an extraterrestrial affairs correspondent?”

All of the above pollutants can be cleared from your vicinity with a A$165 slab of green plastic. Feedback is admittedly confused as to why a device for clearing electrosmog must itself be plugged into a power outlet, although we may be overthinking this. We worry Guy’s device may have been defective, however: “I turned it on and the Wi-Fi still worked.”

Royal gush

WITH her marriage to Prince Harry due later this year, all sorts of companies are keen to ride Meghan Markle’s wedding train. ZSL London Zoo announced its newest arrival, an okapi, had been christened Meghan “in celebration of this year’s forthcoming royal wedding”. The press release notes that “the name is particularly fitting because okapis were coincidentally first brought to the world’s attention in 1901 by another Harry – ZSL fellow Sir Harry Johnston”.

While no doubt a rare and beautiful creature, the successful actor and humanitarian might rankle at the suggestion she was discovered by Prince Harry. And even more so if she knew, as Feedback’s colleagues were quick to point out, that Johnston never laid eyes on an okapi. Instead, he procured a few pieces of striped skin and a skull – not the most romantic comparison.

Con-fusion

WHILE browsing news about the Lockheed Martin Skunk Works compact fusion project, Martin Stuart came across this illuminating fact: “Fusion is the process by which a gas is heated up and separated into its ions and electrons”. That describes the first step of fusion, we suppose, .

Perhaps this neatly sums up the best way to succeed when dealing with insurmountable difficulties, says Martin: if a problem is too hard to solve, redefine the problem. “It worked on the Kobayashi Maru, so why not here? There really is no limit to what can be achieved,” especially if the meaning of “achieve” itself is redefined.

Love drops

FEEDBACK is on the lookout for racy headlines in scientific journals (20 January). John Warr writes: “I recall some years back giving an in-house presentation on solution-enhanced dispersion by supercritical fluids, which I called ‘The Joy of SEDS’.”

Fortunately, John was persuaded not to recreate the cover of Alex Comfort’s book as his first slide “on the grounds that it might not have been a great career move”.

Stimulating stu

SOME energetic wildlife: while going through a few of BBC Radio 5 Live’s science podcasts, Mike Adams found an interview with Ken Catania at Vanderbilt University in Tennessee. Mike notes that Catania’s research on electric eels appeared in the journal Current Biology.

Weigh lady weigh

statue of liberty

ANDREW COOPER writes to accuse Feedback of feathering our own nest. “I think you have a racket going within èƵ to provide you with stories,” he says. “Why else would an item in the news section (13 January, p 8) use the novel unit of ‘Statue of Liberty’ to describe the weight of a boulder shifted by storm waves.”

He recommends the unit be abbreviated “SoLs”, although it is “not clear if it is a decimal unit, or whether we must garner the weights of lesser statues to serve as an analogue of the Imperial system”.

Leave to soak

WHILE wandering through his local supermarket, Alan Fowler spotted some rolls of kitchen paper advertised as having “4D action”. By way of explanation, he says, the product claimed it used “magic and physics”.

“I can only assume that it doesn’t actually remove the dirt, he says, “but projects it into the future so it can be cleaned later.”

You can send stories to Feedback by email at feedback@newscientist.com. Please include your home address. This week’s and past Feedbacks can be seen on our website.

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